Only if you're referring to the person specifically. Governor Brown
Otherwise, no: the governor of Pennsylvania
Yes.
No you do not.
Nope!
Here in Ohio, Governor Ted Strickland is in favor of the new federal takeover of the health care industry. Out in Arizona, there's a governor who has made her mark as an immigration conservative -- Jan Brewer. Get it?
Only if it is the first word in a sentence.
Greek should always be capitalized.
You would never capitalize a word because of the comma. Onlt capitalize it if it's a word that is always capitalized like France, I, Tuesday or Frederick.
No, in most cases. However, if you were referring to a specific governor, such as Governor Blunt, you would capitalize it. For example: "Do you know who's governor?" "No, but Governor Roy Blunt was last time I checked."
You would capitalize Baltimore by making the first letter of the word uppercase - "Baltimore."
If your using it as your first word in your sentence... Yes you do, but if yoour not no.
Always as it is the name of the language. It is a proper noun, which you must always capitalize.
It is always capitalized because it is a propernou n.